The Talmud expounds some of the most virulent racism, as these extracts plainly show. However, as a reader points out not all Jews are influenced by it, or even read it. Only the ultra religious study it, the rest haven’t a clue. We leave you to decide

More than being an insider’s confirmation of the power of the pro-Israel lobby over Congress, the former US Senator’s letter also calls into question Noam Chomsky’s increasingly suspect looking motives

AP. North Korea’s military may have fired a laser at a US helicopter in March, a US official said yesterday, as the communist state ditched its last legal obligation to keep itself free of nuclear weapons.
The aircraft’s censors detected the unknown type of laser while it was flying near the heavily fortified frontier that divides the two Koreas, the US military official said on condition of anonymity.

No one was injured and no equipment was damaged in the incident.

North Korea said yesterday a 1992 agreement with South Korea not to deploy nuclear arms on the Korean Peninsula was nullified, accusing the United States of derailing the deal.

“The inter-Korean declaration on denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula was thus reduced to a dead document due to the US vicious hostile policy to stifle the DPRK with nukes,” said the North’s official news agency, KCNA. DPRK stands for the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, the North’s official name.

The announcement came as US President George Bush and South Korean President Roh Moo-hyun were about to meet today in Washington to discuss North Korea’s nuclear programs.

The accord was the last remaining legal obligation under which North Korea was banned from developing atomic arms. In January this year, North Korea withdrew from the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, a global accord to prevent the spread of nuclear weapons.

A US military official in Seoul, speaking on condition of anonymity, said yesterday North Korea was believed to have exported $US580 million ($893.82 million) worth of missiles to Iran, Pakistan, Libya, Syria, Egypt, Yemen and the United Arab Emirates in 2001.

In December, a shipment of North Korean missiles bound for Yemen was briefly stopped in the Arabian Sea.

North Korea accuses the United States of planning to attack the communist country, which Mr Bush has branded part of an “axis of evil” along with Iran and Iraq. It also revived its claim that the US military keeps many nuclear weapons in South Korea, turning the country into “the biggest nuclear advance base in the Far East”.

Washington says it wants to use dialogue to resolve the nuclear crisis, although US officials have not ruled out a military option.

North Korea “keenly felt that the denuclearisation of the Korean Peninsula would only remain as a daydream unless the US drops its hostile policy toward the DPRK”, KCNA said.

It said the US invasion of Iraq taught it that “a war can be averted and the sovereignty of the country and the security of the nation can be protected only when a country has … a strong military deterrent force capable of decisively repelling any attack to be made by any types of sophisticated weapons.”

In New York, Mr Roh said he would never condone North Korea’s nuclear development, but Seoul and Washington agree the nuclear standoff with the North must be solved peacefully “by all means”.

“It is incumbent upon Pyongyang to give up its nuclear project and come forward as a responsible member of the international community,” he said. “When the North takes this route, the Republic of Korea and the international community will extend the necessary support and co-operation.”

Julianne Lee, a Roh spokeswoman, said the North Korean statement might be a negotiating ploy in the wake of talks last month with US officials in Beijing.

During the talks in Beijing, US officials said North Korea claimed it already possesses nuclear weapons, and that it had reprocessed 8000 spent nuclear fuel rods – a move that could yield several atomic bombs within months.

North Korea offered to drop its nuclear and missile programs in exchange for security guarantees and economic aid, according to US officials.

The nuclear crisis flared in October, when Washington said North Korea admitted having a secret nuclear program in violation of a 1994 treaty with Washington.